While some fans may be too angry to return, it will be interesting to see if arenas are packed once things start up again—or if there will be empty seats in the home stadiums of even the most prolific teams.

We do not yet know the exact length of the schedule, although we do know it will be either 48 or 50 games. This means that each individual game will be more important to success than in a longer 82-game season.

Teams will have to take advantage of the 24 or 25 games that they will have on home ice rather than the usual 41-game home slate.

Playing at home can be a big advantage for teams. Records have shown that teams usually play better when their own fans cheer them on than when others root against them.

Let's take a look at which teams have fed off their home crowd and stadium advantages the most over the past few seasons.

Please take into consideration that these rankings are based on records and home/road differentials, not crowd noise and fanbase passion. Some of the most passionate fanbases in the league are not in this article.

5. Detroit Red Wings

Last year, the Red Wings broke the all-time record for consecutive home wins, winning 23 straight at Joe Louis Arena.

Despite economic troubles in Detroit, Red Wings fans are some of the most loyal in hockey, packing The Joe game in and game out.

Another factor that could give Detroit an advantage is that the boards are bouncier and more unpredictable than in other stadiums. The Red Wings have an advantage from this because they practice with the boards and get 41 games a year to use them.

4. San Jose Sharks

The Sharks haven't seen monumental differences between home and road records, but they have been better at home practically every season in recent years.

HP Pavilion, also known as the "Shark Tank," is arguably the loudest building in the NHL, as fans in northern California have made San Jose one of the league's better hockey cities.

Another advantage that the Sharks have is that the road locker rooms are not next to the bench. They are across the ice in one of the corners behind the net.

This means that if an opposing player is injured, he cannot be tended to on his own bench and must skate across the ice to reach the locker room. Also, once he returns, he has to wait for a whistle and deal with heckling rather than just jump back on the bench.

3. St. Louis Blues

The St. Louis Blues came out of nowhere in the 2011-12 season, winning the Central Division and earning the No. 2 seed in the Western Conference.

Despite having less-than-stellar records in previous years, the Blues have always been tough to beat at the Scottrade Center.

In 2009, the last time they made the playoffs before 2012, the Blues were 18-18-5 on the road but 23-13-5 on home ice. In 2011, they finished 10 points out of the playoffs but again finished 23-13-5 at home while only posting 15 wins on the road.

Last year, the Blues were almost impossible to beat in St. Louis, losing only six out of 41 home games in regulation and winning 30.

2. Washington Capitals

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Capitals fans are some of the most passionate in the league—they show up and "Rock the Red" game in and game out. The Verizon Center can be one of the loudest stadiums in the league, and the team has responded.

Washington has had a significantly better home than road record every single year it has played at the Verizon Center.

The most notable season at home was 2009-10, when the Capitals finished with a home record of 30-5-6.